A steed will pull you into various kinds of activities.The 18 year old pulled the 24 into a hookup and a beating.

LOVERS IN OPPOSITION:While fascinated by and initially attracted to each other, those sings in direct opposition eventually repel one another due to clashes in essential disposition.

Source: Chinese Sexual Astrology by Shelly Wu

Now, for the hate crime:

Aaron Keahey has spent the last month recovering after an encounter on a phone app nearly cost him his life.

Keahey, 24, starting talking to 18-year-old Brice Johnson on the app MeetMe on Labor Day. Keahey, who lived in Dallas at the time, was staying with family in Springtown, a small town about 70 miles west of Dallas in Parker County, for the holiday weekend.

The two started chatting in the early morning and kept messaging for about an hour until they agreed to meet in person. Keahey then drove the 15 minutes to Johnson’s house.

“I don’t remember if he said he was bisexual or if he said he was gay, so I just took him as some guy that usually dates girls but is undercover about his sexuality,” Keahey told Dallas Voice.

But when he arrived, Keahey said Johnson was upset and attacked him. He only remembers meeting him before the memories go dark.

“When I showed up, I only remember talking to him for like a minute,” he said. “All I remember is that happened and I woke up in the hospital four days later.”

Keahey’s injuries included brain trauma, nerve damage and broken facial bones. The pressure on his brain made doctors doubt he would even survive.

“They didn’t expect me to make it through the night,” he said.

Keahey had to have facial reconstruction surgery and has a metal eye socket now. He couldn’t walk for three weeks and recently stopped using a walker. The nerve damage caused the right side of his nose and area around it to go numb and his right hand to shake. He said doctors expect to know if the damage is permanent in six to 18 months.

Keahey was taken to the hospital by Johnson, who was arrested by police for the attack on Sept. 10. He was charged with aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury, a second-degree felony. He has since been released on a $25,000 bond. If prosecutors seek a hate crime enhancement under state law to a first-degree felony, he could face five years to life in prison and up to a $10,000 fine, according to the Texas Penal Code.